File::pushd does a temporary chdir that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to pushd in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls chdir to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope.

This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp.

For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered.

Warning: if you create multiple pushd objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.

Caches the current working directory, calls chdir to change to the target directory, and returns a File::pushd object. When the object is destroyed, the working directory reverts to the original directory.

The provided target directory can be a relative or absolute path. If called with no arguments, it uses the current directory as its target and returns to the current directory when the object is destroyed.

If the target directory does not exist or if the directory change fails for some reason, pushd will die with an error message.

Can be given a hashref as an optional second argument. The only supported option is untaint_pattern, which is used to untaint file paths involved. It defaults to {qr{^("" in -+@\w.+)$}}, which is reasonably restrictive (e.g. it does not even allow spaces in the path). Change this to suit your circumstances and security needs if running under taint mode. *Note*: you must include the parentheses in the pattern to capture the untainted portion of the path.

This function is like pushd but automatically creates and calls chdir to a temporary directory created by File::Temp. Unlike normal File::Temp cleanup which happens at the end of the program, this temporary directory is removed when the object is destroyed. (But also see preserve.) A warning will be issued if the directory cannot be removed.

As with pushd, tempd will die if chdir fails.

It may be given a single options hash that will be passed internally to pushd.

{
my $dir = tempd();
$dir->preserve; # mark to preserve at end of scope
$dir->preserve(0); # mark to delete at end of scope
}

Controls whether a temporary directory will be cleaned up when the object is destroyed. With no arguments, preserve sets the directory to be preserved. With an argument, the directory will be preserved if the argument is true, or marked for cleanup if the argument is false. Only tempd objects may be marked for cleanup. (Target directories to pushd are always preserved.) preserve returns true if the directory will be preserved, and false otherwise.